As well as the George Medal for Mr Kenny, 78, three other people are being given honours following the murder of Jo Cox outside her constituency surgery in Birstall, West Yorkshire, in June 2016.

PC Craig Nicholls and PC Jonathan Wright, who arrested the killer, Thomas Mair, are awarded the Queen’s Gallantry Medal, while Sandra Major, a constituency worker who witnessed Ms Cox being shot, becomes an MBE on the honours list for parliamentary services and service to the community.

Tourists Allen Pembroke and Paul Short both receive the Queen’s Commendation for Bravery for helping the wounded after a gunman opened fire on a beach in Sousse, Tunisia in 2015, killing 38 holidaymakers, 30 of them British.

Of the 1,109 recipients, half are female, 6.5% have a disability, three-quarters undertake work in their communities, and 10% are from a Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) background.

Among them are musician Chi-chi Nwanoku, who set up a foundation to help provide career opportunities for young BAME classical musicians (OBE), and Nitin Palan, who co-founded the annual Diwali On Trafalgar Square event, who is made an MBE for services to interfaith relations.

1,109

people on list

74% for outstanding work in their communities

50% are woman

18 men knighted

14 women become dames

The honours system

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Commonly awarded ranks:

Companion of Honour – Recipients wear the initials CH after their name. Limited to 65 people

Former SAS soldier and best-selling novelist Andy McNab becomes a CBE for his work promoting adult literacy. The Bravo Two Zero author is a literacy ambassador for the Reading Agency and has written several of the charity’s Quick Read titles for young adults.

Other CBEs include writer and illustrator Raymond Briggs, singer Sade and veteran Archers actress June Spencer.

From the entertainment world, there are also OBEs for comedian David Walliams, and actresses Sarah Lancashire and Patricia Hodge, while composer and conductor George Benjamin is knighted.

Broadcaster Gloria Hunniford, who lost her daughter Caron Keating to cancer, is made an OBE for services to cancer charities.

Another broadcaster, Natasha Kaplinsky, becomes an OBE for services to Holocaust commemoration. Kaplinsky, who lost relatives in the Slonim ghetto in present-day Belarus, has interviewed survivors as a member of the United Kingdom Holocaust Memorial Foundation advisory board.

Pop stars Ed Sheeran, Emeli Sande and 1960s singer Sandie Shaw are among the new MBEs.

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Footballer Steven Davis, rugby’s Rory Best and rower Heather Stanning are among the sporting figures on the list

From sport there are OBEs for Olympic rower Heather Stanning and Ireland rugby captain Rory Best.

Judy Murray is made an OBE for services to tennis. Perhaps best known as the mother of players Andy and Jamie, she has worked to grow the sport among women and girls and is a former Great Britain Federation Cup captain.

Northern Ireland and Southampton football captain Steven Davis, rugby league coach Brian Noble, and boxing great John Conteh are all made MBE.

Honour for the squadron

There is a damehood for Helena Morrissey, who founded the 30% Club with the aim of achieving greater female representation on UK corporate boards.

And one of the most senior women involved in the UK’s railways – Alison Munro, the managing director of the HS2 high-speed rail project – is made a CBE.

The founder of Iceland supermarkets, Malcolm Walker, is knighted; brothers Brian and Alan Stannah, of Stannah Stairlifts, are made MBEs, and Marks Spencer style director Belinda Earl becomes an OBE.

Britain’s last Dambuster, retired squadron leader George “Johnny” Johnson, 95, receives an MBE for services to World War Two remembrance and the community in Bristol.

The subject of a petition calling for him to be honoured, Mr Johnson said: “I’m the lucky one. I’m still alive. I’m representing the squadron and it is the squadron that is being honoured with this, not me.”

Jonathan Phipps, chairman of D-Day Revisited, which organises trips for veterans also becomes an MBE.

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George Johnson’s MBE is for services to WW2 remembrance and the community in Bristol

A British Empire Medal goes to school crossing patrol warden Effie Walker, who started her job when Colgrain Primary, in Helensburgh, Argyll and Bute, opened in 1973.

The Pearly Queen of Old Kent Road, Doreen Golding, is given the BEM for services to charity and the Pearly Kings and Queens Society.

Neil Hulme, from Worthing, West Sussex, who “almost single-handedly” saved the Duke of Burgundy butterfly from local extinction, also receives the BEM.

“I’m absolutely delighted, but the conservation of butterflies is always a team effort, so it is equally a recognition of my colleagues, and particularly the volunteers,” he said.

The Cabinet Office said the prime minister had provided a “strategic steer” to the honours committee that the system should “support children and young people to achieve their potential, enhance life opportunities, remove barriers to success and work to tackle discrimination”.

The CBEs for Aisha Gill, of Roehampton University, for tackling forced marriage, “honour” crimes and violence against women, Gilian McNeil, of charity Theirworld, for the health and education of vulnerable children and women, and NSPCC chairman Mark Wood ,were said to be examples “that reflect these priorities”.